T Chamaeleontis is a young star surrounded by a transitional disk, and a
plausible candidate for ongoing planet formation. Recently, a substellar
companion candidate was reported within the disk gap of this star. However, its
existence remains controversial, with the counter-hypothesis that light from a
high inclination disk may also be consistent with the observed data. The aim of
this work is to investigate the origin of the observed closure phase signal to
determine if it is best explained by a compact companion. We observed T Cha in
the L and K s filters with sparse aperture masking, with 7 datasets covering a
period of 3 years. A consistent closure phase signal is recovered in all L and
K s datasets. Data were fit with a companion model and an inclined
circumstellar disk model based on known disk parameters: both were shown to
provide an adequate fit. However, the absence of expected relative motion for
an orbiting body over the 3-year time baseline spanned by the observations
rules out the companion model. Applying image reconstruction techniques to each
dataset reveals a stationary structure consistent with forward scattering from
the near edge of an inclined disk.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter